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Minter in “Her STRAND—Kadoiph A Ayres in “The COLTS EU M—Bthel “wi LIBERTY. (First National) Jim Bradley Freddy Biecker Amy Bleeker 'S WOMAN'S place in the home? Or is it in the business, politi al or professional world? Constance Talmadge's latest com: @y drama, “Woman's Piace,” now showing at the Liberty, involves this important question. It is a typical Talmadge picture with the young ina “oni regina tats ee CLEMMER | “CONFLICT” real) Prisciiia Dean Ea Conn Sarno wiiueon Florence short «Unt aa Remalic Remaite Fallon “Hundreds of husky lumberjacks in combat, battling for timber is one of the thrilling scenes “Conflict,” the picture drama in Priscilla Dean is starring at the Clemmer. Clarence Budington Kellan wrote the story, which tells of a woman's All—or nearly all—the secrets of | the motion picture star's life inside the studio, ds well as what she does away from the Klieglight glare, are fevealed in “The Speed Giri,” Bebe Daniels’ latest comedy drama, which ie now showing at the Blue Mouse. iss Daniels appears in the role of Lee, a vivacious little picture ‘Winning Way,” an adaptation of a famous London stage hit in which Mary Miles Minter is now appearing at the Winter Garden. The popular Bittle Realart star is shown in the role of @ cool and resourceful busi- Ress girl, a young newspaper writer whose speciaity is literary reviews and interviews with authors. STRAND Adolphe Menjou «+ Walter Long ~~ Ruth Miller, the pretty Seattle , is one of the many players in Sheik,” the picture co-starring dolph Valentino and Agnes Ayres the Strand. Miss Miller appears a slave, and her dancing is one of features of the pleture. “The Sheik” is a powerful Arabian | COLISEUM “WEALTH" (Paramount) Ethel Clayton . Herbert Rawlinson i J. M, Dumont ie Rolland... Jean Acker Mary McLeod, a young artist, weds @ young millionaire, Phillip Domi- nick. Dolninick’s mother, a society woman, is opposed to the marriage. How she succeeds in wrecking their marital happiness is told in “Wealth,” the new picture drama Bow at the Coliseum, Ciayton as the star. | COLONIAL | 4H a a “BI” Russell, big and athletic Puts fine punch into hi @rn picture, “Singing River Playing at the Colonial, ‘Tne plot is full of action. It is set in the days when a man had to fight to hold anything, and in many cases now to fight hardest to get the girl! ye wanted, even tho the girl was in love with him 4 —* ! | “THE MAN FROM NOWHER! 4 (Arrow) Zersy Xorton Dune Fuller Jack Hoxie Fred Moore yr eee Panzy Porter ne Lown Drunkard Francia Ford Continuing the popular policy of showing Western dramas, the Rex introduces a new Western player as the star of the new picture, “The Man From Nowhere.” He is Jack Hoxie, the big, handsome actor who Fecently visited here in person “The Man From Nowhere” Western mining story. OLA DANA Viola Dana has bought a home in the Hollywood foothills, She is liv- ing there with her father and mother, Mr. and Mrs, Emil Flugarth. Her sister, Shirley Mayon, ia vaca- fiewing in the Lust, iy | with Ethel) id _ PT I—Consiance Talmadge, Live rty. & | scene fror » “The Speed Girl,” | | Hovie Qhtizzes | | (Conducted in co-operation with | Associated First National Pictures | Jae) | |. Anxious—The address of. the Ho- bart Bosworth production is care of | Ince Studios, Culver City, Cal. Alice—If you send a self-addressed stamped envelope to the MacDonald ‘Film corporation, 904 Girard st. Los | Angeles, Cal. enclosing the usual, 25 cents for matling, | am certain Kath: | jerine will send you an autographed |photograph. Thomas Meighan is an| American of Irish descent. Wallie Reid comes of Scottixnh forbears, Grace H.—Chariie Chaplin's real} |name? It is Charles Chaplin. jors and actresses frequently use their own names. | Delmarie—-The address of Conrad Nagel is 1846 Crerokee ave. Los An-| jBeles, Cal. Mae Murray can be }reached at the Tiffany Production | company, 1540 Rroadway, New York | Charlie Chaplin, Chartie Chap-| 1416 La Brea! ave., Los Angeles, Cal. Gloria Swan- son, Lasky Studio, Hollywood, Cal, | Cc. B Q—Monty Blue can be} jFeached at the present time at the Lambs club, New York city. Of |course Monty is a great football fan | jand he couk! not mim that game. | Colly—It i# most difficult to gain jadmission to a motion picture studio. j1f there is some very good reason | why you should be allowed to visit | the studio, all well and good; the/ privilege would no doubt be given) you. | AT WORK LSS Pauline Frederick. She has} completed “The Lure of Jade” and is now filming “Judith of Blue Lake Ranch.” THEATRE CROWDS ~ IN NEW PICTURES The Los Angeles theatres have J been furnishing “atmosphere” for | John Griffith *Wray’s latest produc tion for Ince, Various crowds of theatre-goers have ‘been photo: graphed, in addition to several play | house lobbies and the struc of a] new theatre that ts being erected, They will appear. in the picture| | “Jiro.” “Gas, Ol and Water," “The Barnstormer” and “The Deuce of Spades” are three pittures re- cently completed by Charles Ray. He is now working on Roy Wag- ner’s play, “Smudge. A BUSY COMEDIAN Max Linder began his career in 1903 when he made “The Outing of a Schoolboy," said to be the first comely ever produced. Since then he has made 360 films, which means one about every 17 days. He is working now on @ bu lesque of “The Three Musketeers. Hie last was “Be My Wife.” screen Authors have often gaid that the movies butcher their stories, that | nest, or whatever your favorite movie queen wears. | even the men may soon be copying the permanent adulations jof the movie hero’s hair. land other artists aes S -Mary Miles Minter, Winter Garden, 3. Blue Mouse. 8—Priscilla Dean, Clemmer. Movies Set the Styles of Milady’s Coiffure O GIRLS’ LOoK. AT PERCIVAL $| jvehicle for Miss DuPont, Universal ) PICKFORD CURLITIS The fat lady thinks she'll look like Nazimova if she has her hair bobbed like Nazi. The Pickford curl used to be the rage. Now it’s the Swanson marcel, the Mae Busch bird's Yes, BY JAMES DEAN [that they'll make themselvés look Styles in milady'’s hairdrese were |ridiculous. They'd just get mad and set in the 16th century by Benvenuto | go to some otlier shop to get it done. Cellini, Leonardo, Michael d’Angelo anyway.” | Here's what I heard at In the 18th century the Marquise | shop— de Pompadour and the ladies of the| “There's a girl who comes in here court of Louis XV. were criterions of now having permanent waves put in cotffures. her hair, She has a photograph of Today, in the 20th century, the Gloria Swanson and saya she wants fashions of hairdress are establishol her waye to be just like Gloria's. by movie actresses. |She looks in the mirror and at the The last statement is founded on| photograph to see that it's béing the leading hairdressing establish-|done that way.” ments of New York. It, n& doubt,| And at another shop— can be verified in any city of the| “We have about 20 actora of the country where movies are shown and stage and the movies who are regu hairdressing shops maintained liar patrons. Most of them have their Even while I was talking to a/hair curled but several of them ere hairdresser in a Fifth ave, hop a having permanent waves put in their woman who was fat and 40, but not hair. One of the latter ig one of tite so fair, entered, best known movie heroes,” “I want my hair bobbed That's interesting stuff. We poor fluffed all up like Nazimoya’s,” she|males may soon be trailing after told an attendant screen idols in the matter of hair “See, that's just an example of | cuts and ourlycues what I was telling you,” whixpered| In the early days of this tountry the woman to whom I was taiking.|men wore powdered wigs because “Some of ‘em think that all they |they wanted to look dignified, like need to look like some famous wom: judges and chancellors, And, today an is to have their hair fixed in a many of us want to look handsome, similar manner, You can't tell ‘em |like movie heroes ROBERT BRUNTON TOURNEUR PLANNING GOING ABROAD BIG PRODUCTION Robert Brunton, who, having sold} Maurice Tourneur, who for the his Hollywood studios, is to tour! past several weeks has maintained « Europe, with an eye to producing | sphinx-like silence as to the detail. acroas the water, will visit the land|of his next production, other than of his nativity, Scotland, and film) stating that it will be an all-star spe some of the familiar sc of his’ clal for Associated First National re boyhood, Brunton was a scenic art-| | is to relieve the curlous-minded ist in Scotland when “discovered” by | with a full announcement of his Sir Henry Irving, and brought to| plang within a week or ten days, It London and later to Americ by the | is said he will commence active pro- great actor as his art direc | duction within two or three weeks, and will work under pressure to have the feature nle for release by the end of F another and HIGHTONE STUFF Carl Laemmie, president versal, has prope the establish ment of a film gallery in Los An-| i geies. He would admit to it pictures| C™me he conclusion recently hieving a certain standard ana| ‘hat _ red more strenuous passed upon by impartial reviewers, | sae pga as taken up He would make of the building an| y¢leriding. architectural masterpiece, This proj ect would ¢ of Unt Shirley Mason, the Fox star, dog aii ee aes eullecien ote)” SHARLIE AND LAARY world non, the Vita own in France Charlie Chaplin as extremely popular in nee. Larry is an especial favor: with the poster and magazine ar. tists, who have made the comedian's grotesque face and wide, flapping trousers as famillar to all Parisiang as Charlie's big shoes Larry § Enid Bennett is to play for a | 200, It i while on the with a Los Angeles repertoire company, the Harlequin players. She will be presented In a one- act playlet. oh come Charlot.” are DORIS M Doris May will have as her leading man in “Boy Crazy," Harry Myers, the noted “Connecticut Yankee,” My- ers has just completed a role oppo-| California to make his pictures. nite Alice Lake, He has become one | Alice Cathoun, Vitagraph. luminace of the most popular comedians of the | tay just arrived in Los Angelos. to | Richard Barthelmess will probably be the next Eastern star to come to directors mins the author's point of view. Rupert Hughes has been handed a megaphone by the Gold- wyn company and will direct his {next story. The result should be very interesting to authors. American screen, | work there permanently, James Rennie, who is Dorothy} Anita Stewart has started filming Gish's husband, is to be starred in|“The Woman He Married.” She is “The Dust Flower,” a Basil King! supported by Shannon Day and story. Darrel Foss, Ethel Clayton, Coliseum, jeon. | Dreams, | product! | site fe Ags 4—Bill Russe clure Patter Maurice Tourneur is filmipg Lorna Doone.” t Is success. be stage Griffith's next West,” Fay Baint may ors “The Golden Gallows’ is the next star, who once was Marguerite Arm. strong. ° Warm tithe Gouverneur Morris and = Green.” of a ncenario for lways That's the written by Goldwyn, “The Gilded bought ax a ve Cage” has been icle for Gloria Bwan- That is an adaptation of “Love & musical comedy now playing on Broadway. | see Frank Packord, author of “The Miracle Man,” has a new play under by J. Parker Read. Its wned.” oe Anna Q Nilsson ix to play oppo- James Kirkwood in “The Man being filmed in Ite ce . om Home,” orge Fitamaurk ee | man, who played In| is to have a promi Marjorie Se “Dream Street [nent role in the film version of Sin Air” dair Lewis’ “Fr: ° . . Day on the sereen. in front ‘of little anys, “I can't see says, “All right I do.” Topica of the Big man sitting man. them.” watch me and laugh when Lila Les Denies She’s Engaged The young lady who should know | is not going to who stars in ro: | man | best seye that she [marry John Gilbert. {mantic plays for William Fox. Lila | | Lee and Jack Gilbert have been great |pais for a long time, but the rumor of their approaching marriage, which came out of Lon Angeles, ts denied |most emphatically by Miss Lee and | her mother. Wallace Reid boxed Kid Me- Coy for the middleweight belt in filmiand. The result is to be seen on the screen when “The Champion” is shown. APPLE SHOW SCENES IN LIBERTY NEWS| Liberty News events, opening Sat urday at the Liberty, will shy Queen Pippin and hes Peaches at the | Apple show, and unusual scenes of | King Winter's visit to Seattle. The) big Thanksgiving game between U.| of W. and Washington State Colle at the stadium, also will be on th screen, Pictures also will be shown | of Eddie Hubbard, the man who re- | tly had a narrow escape in an dent in Puget sound, ) ! | | | — SERIAL QUEEN Ruth Roland. She’s queen of the serials. Her last two were “The Avenging Arrow” and “White Eagle.” War tax on theatre admissions under 10 cents will likely be | eliminated under the new senate tax bill, now in conference, The tax has cost the picture. indus- try $10,000,000 in the last two yeurs, y |fering at rs ey Loe Leroy Scott | Is Author of Chaney Film Thru his long experience as a s0- in some of our largest the author of Lon hicle, “The 1 to the) Scott aney's latest starring v Night Rone,” has present a @ thrilling story which re veals the inner workings and: the tremendous power that is wielded by the criminal gange. Most of the in. cidents in “The Night Rose” ar founded on actual facts that have) to Mr, Scott's attention. He} studied the eriminal mind at} and has n able ‘to y the professional lawbreaker as he really is, His study of the underworld life | In San Francisco is interwoven with & compelling love story, Lon Chaney, who will be remem: | bered for his remarkable role in “The Miracle Man” and then again 4s the legless underworld king in “The Penalty,” is seen in the leading role in “The Nitht Rose.” “The Night Rose will be the of. the Blue Mouse starting December 3 has Saturday, nets ato stilts | Theodore Kosloff fights a duel with Mahion Hamilton in “The Lane That Had No Turning,” Agnes Ayres’ first Paramount star picture. Kosloff is the own- er of three medals for swords- manship presented by French 5—Jack Hoxie, Rex, 6—Rudolpi Velexntino, Strand. and Italian schools of fencing. 7—Bebe Daniels in Will Rogers in (Suit Against “The Ropin’ Fool’’| Scenario Firm Will Rogers reclery called “The Ropin’ Fool.” 1t| The Photoplaywrights’ League of 7 | shows his many tricks with the |Ameri a association of lariat, They are made doubly inter-|S¢enario writers, with headquarters esting by slow-motion photography. |!" Los Angeles, Just filed a $156- ‘There isn't much of a story to the |900 damage suit against the Palmer film, but, as Rogers said in a gub-|Photoplay corporation, a scenario” AT : ._|8@hool, also in Los Angeles, claim- title, “Ninety per cent of the movies| ing that the league has been slaw contain no story, but this is the first | dered and libeled by the school. one to admit it." | The Palmer corporation is charged Rogers ranks next to Rupert|by Wycliffe A. Hill, president of the = Hughes in the art of title writing. writers’ organization, with instigat Share ‘ach: 6 ter ema ing a defamatory article against the — ya jleague, and its officials, which re= “They say Griffith pictures set the|\cently appeared in a Los Angeles movies ahead four years. This one | newspaper, as well as having write will put them back where they were.” |ten libelous letters, and generally “I don't know what they consider | circulating damaging propaganda in art, but there's 30 years’ hard work |an effort to rid itself of all com| in this picture.” jtion. This action by the ashen rea? {school is alleged to be in re LEE MORAN for the recent announcement by the Ie Moran is haunting Southern | Photoplaywrights’ league that fornia football gridiro: for|methods of the Palmer ‘and scenes of his newest comedy. Various |scenario schools in dealing a seasonal games have been filmed in | amateur writers would be rigidly iim addition to that action “faked” by | vestigated by the league. : the camera. has released a two | national rs MARCUS LEOW | Mareus Leow, president of Metra, is perfecting plans to send Rex |eram abroad to make a pretentie |film feature, probably based on of Sir Walter Scott's novels, NAZIMOVA Nazimova, now heading her own productions, is producing a general. ized. version of Ibsen's Doll's House.” The cast includes Alan Hale, Wedgewood Nowell, Nigel de Brullier, Florence’ Fisher, Elinor Oli- ver and Cara Lee. Norma Talmadge's next film will be an adaptation of Balzac's “The Duchess of Langeais.” She is to start soon at her new West Coast studio. Thomas Meighan received @- old nugget from the of the theatre in Sonora, as a mark of gratitude for ing a personal appearance in town on location work. record house greeted Tom, “Huh! When I’m Mayor I Won't Need a Husband! So There!” CONSTA s CONSTANCE TALMADGE NCE TALMADG Is running for mayor on a platform of of style and smile in “WOMAN'S PLACE” Does she get the men’s votes? Does a duck swim? 3,479 Laughat “FOR LAND'S SAKE” Her stump speech is * 14 trunks of Parisian gowns! Liberty News Queen Pippin and Peaches at the Apple LORECTION JENSEN @& VON H Always the Best for the Liberty Guest MALOTTE—In Special Concert Sunday at 1:30 “March Militaire” ..... “Face to Face" (Sacred Song). zy Mississippi” (Slow Waltz) Sun “Alexandri,” song from “Aphrodt “Dance of the Hours" (Ballet from “Gloconda”) »..3Frang, Schubert . Herbert Johnson ‘ ». Ponchielli ay + . . . DeFreyne & by Dewey Washington te’ seeeees Anselm Goetz) ge